Some vulnerabilities have been reported in imlib2, which can be
exploited by malicious people to cause a DoS (Denial of Service)
or potentially compromise an application using the library.

The vulnerabilities are caused due to unspecified errors within
the processing of JPG, ARGB, PNG, LBM, PNM, TIFF, and TGA images.
This may be exploited to execute arbitrary code by e.g. tricking a
user into opening a specially crafted image file with an
application using imlib2.

A vulnerability has been discovered in imlib2, which can
be exploited by malicious people to potentially compromise
an application using the library.

The vulnerability is caused due to a pointer arithmetic
error within the "load()" function provided by the XPM
loader. This can be exploited to cause a heap-based buffer
overflow via a specially crafted XPM file.

I've discovered more vulnerabilities in Imlib
(1.9.13). In particular, it appears to be affected by a
variant of Chris Evans' libXpm flaw #1 (CAN-2004-0782, see
http://scary.beasts.org/security/CESA-2004-003.txt). Look
at the attached image, it kills ee on my 7.3.

I've discovered more vulnerabilities in Imlib
(1.9.13). In particular, it appears to be affected by a
variant of Chris Evans' libXpm flaw #1 (CAN-2004-0782, see
http://scary.beasts.org/security/CESA-2004-003.txt). Look
at the attached image, it kills ee on my 7.3.

A vulnerability has been discovered in imlib2, which can
be exploited by malicious people to potentially compromise
an application using the library.

The vulnerability is caused due to a pointer arithmetic
error within the "load()" function provided by the XPM
loader. This can be exploited to cause a heap-based buffer
overflow via a specially crafted XPM file.

Some vulnerabilities have been reported in imlib2, which can be
exploited by malicious people to cause a DoS (Denial of Service)
or potentially compromise an application using the library.

The vulnerabilities are caused due to unspecified errors within
the processing of JPG, ARGB, PNG, LBM, PNM, TIFF, and TGA images.
This may be exploited to execute arbitrary code by e.g. tricking a
user into opening a specially crafted image file with an
application using imlib2.